Karl Blossfeldt Nature as Art

Karl Blossfeldt (1865–1932) is considered a pioneer of the New Objectivity in the history of photography. His oeuvre consists of some 6,000 photographs of plants and plant segments that have survived as negatives and in contemporary publications.
Masters of the Camera
Karl Blossfeldt Nature as Art
Robert BeresfordFolio Press New York is part of the Folio Literary Management. group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.foliopressnyc.com.
First published by Folio Books, an imprint of Folio Literary Pty Ltd, in 2022
Text copyright © Linkun Zhen
Illustrations copyright © Linkun Zhen
The moral right of the author and illustrator has been asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, published, performed in public or communicated to the public in any form or by any means without prior written permission from Folio Literary Management Pty Ltd or its authorised licensees.
Cover and text design by Linkun Zhen © Folio Press New York Pty Ltd
Printed and bound in China


Chapter 1

Karl Blossfeldt (1865–1932) is considered a pioneer of the New Objectivity in the history of photography. His oeuvre consists of some 6,000 photographs of plants and plant segments that have survived as negatives and in contemporary publications. In addition, another 500 authorized contemporary prints were found in the archive of the Hochschule der Kunste in Berlin in 1984. These so-called “vintage prints” were believed to have been lost and belonged—along with three-dimensional models—to Blossfeldt’s instructional materials.
As a sculptor and university teacher, he first taught “modeling based on living plants” at the old Kunstgewerbemuseum in the Gropius Building, then at the Berliner Vereinigten Staatsschulen, the present Hochschule der Kunste. He achieved photo-historical fame somewhat innocently and almost unknowingly; for it was not until 1928, shortly before the end of his life, that his Urformen der Kunst appeared. Published with primarily didactic rather than artistic intentions by the Wasmuth Verlag in Berlin, the book made him famous overnight. Blossfeldt surely could not have believed his eyes as he read the reviews.
Begun in 1896, his collection was the result of three decades of diligent botanical documentation and dabbling in aesthetics; suddenly the foremost critics and art philosophers of his day were celebrating the discovery of a theretofore unknown universe. Praised as pioneering feats of the technical medium, almost all the photographs were made with the same camera; and because they were always made for the same purpose—to serve as pedagogical records on film—they were stylistically consistent. Among the first to lavish praise upon Blossfeldt was Walter Benjamin:
He has done his part in that great examination of the perceptive inventory, which will have an unforeseeable effect on our conception of the world. He has proven how right MoholyNagy, the pioneer of the new photography, was when he said: “The limits of photography are unforeseeable. Everything is still so new here that even the search leads to creative results. Technology is the natural precursor for this. The illiterate of the future will not be he who cannot write but he who cannot take a photograph.” Whether we speed up a plant’s growth or show its form in a forty-fold enlargement—in both cases a geyser of new images erupts at points of our existence where we would least expect it.

The projection of vegetal life into technical forms follows the ritual of a magical spell. Objects, alienated and increasingly threatening in their rigid power since Goethe’s day, are fixated—and held by the eye of the camera—until their rigidity seems to dissolve into familiar forms. That is one version; the other interpretation is that the viewer, haunted by technology, capitulates and changes sides. In the mimicry of a humble glance backwards, he believes to recognize that the new forces were already at work in the old vegetal forms archaic ornamental elements. The feelings that accompany these glimpses vary, depending upon what predominates—the hubris of the spellbinding gaze or the humility of transformation.

The decisive factor is to be found elsewhere however. Everything is dependent upon the viewer, not the object viewed. Just how threatening things appear depends upon the capacity and suitability of his optics. With this idealistic premise, the “new way of seeing” braces itself against the experience of subjective impotence in the face of the technical and as is increasingly the case in our century, ideological powers that are so overwhelming. It is feared that the things themselves cannot be changed; relief, and above all consolation, must therefore be sought in a change of perception:

Our eye need only become a bit sharper, our ear a bit more receptive; we need to take in the taste of a piece of fruit more fully; we should be able to tolerate more odors and become more conscious and less forgetful when touching and being touched—in order to draw consolation from our immediate experiences which would be more convincing, more paramount, and truer than all the suffering that could ever torment us.
Patterns and shapes naturally occur.
This
after a year of world war (September 6, 1915). Tragedy and calamity are to be offset by an exertion of the senses, a sensibility devoid of personal interest. The personal aspect must recede so that the essence of things may unfold within the observer.

Rooted in Structure
It is indeed true that Blossfeldt demonstrated little interest in root systems; and in accordance with the classical premises of his aesthetics and their origins in Meurer’s teaching materials, they could hardly have interested him. The amputation that Kubicki criticizes is therefore not an act of random pruning, but rather an aesthetic decision based on principle. Just as the bestial aspect of vegetal functions remains secondary to him, the chaotic subterranean life of tubers is no subject for his photos. It is practically impossible to stylize it.
Every healthy manifestation of art requires a germinative impulse: only from nature’s eternally flowing fountain of youth, from which the peoples of all ages have drawn, can art once again receive new energy and inspiration for healthy development. Blossfeldt’s structural plants must not have seemed adequately rooted in this soil.



The personal aspect must recede so that the essence of things may unfold within the observer.
US $66.00
Folio Press New York
ISBN-10: 173530011X
ISBN-13: 978-1760897949
Designed by Linkun Zhen
Karl Blossfeldt (1865–1932) is considered a pioneer of the New Objectivity in the history of photography. His oeuvre consists of some 6,000 photographs of plants and plant segments that have survived as negatives and in contemporary publications.
Folio Press New York
is part of the Folio Literary Management. group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.foliopressnyc.com.
© Folio Press New York Pty Ltd